The Best of Kass

Written by: Doug Kass11/11/12 - 10:08 AM EST

Tickers in this article:
AAPL

NEW YORK ( TheStreet) -- Doug Kass of Seabreeze Partners is known for his accurate stock market calls and keen insights into the economy, which he shares with RealMoney Pro readers in his daily trading diary.

Among his posts this past week, Kass explained why he's buying shares of Apple and why some recent news from China is encouraging.

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The Apple of My Buy Originally published on Friday, Nov. 9 at 8:44 a.m. EDT.

Hey, I never said that it was a forbidden fruit.

Similar to many, I historically (let's call it over the last five years) failed to recognize how successful a Steve Jobs-led Apple (AAPL) would be as a disruptive innovator of product.

In my " 15 Surprises for 2012 " (written 11 months ago), however, I waxed enthusiastically about the prospects for the profit cycle and share price for Apple. (At that time Apple's shares stood at $403.)

My concerns were multiple, and the major risks (most of which I thought would play out over a few years, not a few quarters) were as follows:

Global economic weakness in 2013 would likely have an adverse impact on Apple's relatively high-priced stable of products.

Challenges of delivering a high-quality product in quantity.

The risks associated with the loss of Steve Jobs were being underestimated by the markets.

Investors may look beyond the recent new product offerings. The steady stream of "wow factor" products in the company's pipeline may be in jeopardy following the release of the iPhone 5 and of iPad mini.

A changing competitive landscape could be a challenge to the company's market share and profitability.

Apple's shares were overowned and were the beneficiary of fund flows. The almost religious belief in the company (on the part of individual and institutional investors) represented an extreme in investor sentiment.

Apple's valuation, though inexpensive relative to the market and its projected growth rate, was very expensive (on a price-to-sales basis) relative to other hardware companies and on an absolute sales basis.

Ten days later, in " More Bruises on Apple ," I raised additional concerns. I again asked whether there was anyone left that doesn't own Apple's shares at that point in time and how many money managers (in part because of the weighting in the indices) are now overweight the stock, particularly after the aforementioned period of outperformance.

October, in " Will Apple Fall Far From the Tree ," I underscored why the easy comparisons and salad days were likely behind this iconic company and that risk/reward seemed uninspiring with the shares being range-bound (and with a lower end of the range at about $550 a share). I concluded that there are now blemishes and bruises on the world's favorite fruit. Specifically, there were early signs of Apple losing its first-mover advantage (and the elevated gross margins previously achieved). I further suggested that investors now must closely watch whether the company's upgrade cycle is lengthening because of a less-differentiated product, they must monitor the ability to deliver a large amount quality product with limited flaws (e.g., apps such as Maps, scratching, Siri, weight/feel, etc.), and they must closely track cost and margin trends and, of course, the competition.